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Socio-economic and demographic determinants of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality among 45+ adults: evidence from Longitudinal Ageing Study in India

Socio-economic and demographic determinants of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality among 45+ adults: evidence from Longitudinal Ageing Study in India
Socio-economic and demographic determinants of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality among 45+ adults: evidence from Longitudinal Ageing Study in India
Background: studies on cause-specific mortality among 45+ adults remain unknown in Indian settings. However, understanding the epidemiology of this public health problem can guide policy development for premature and old-age mortality prevention. Therefore, we intend to examine the socio-economic and demographic determinants of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality among 45+ adults in India.

Methods: we adopted the cross-sectional data from the Longitudinal Ageing Study of India (LASI-wave-I) conducted in 2017-18. We performed descriptive, bivariate and multivariate analysis.

Results: females, young-old, middle-old, oldest-old showed lower odds of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality than males and middle-aged adults. Central region showed significantly greater odds of all-cause mortality risks than Northern region. Christians have lower odds of all-cause mortality risk than Hindus. With the increase in household income, the odds of NCD-related mortality risks also increase. Central (OR=1.54; p<0.01), Eastern (OR=1.28; p<0.01) and Western regions (OR=1.18; p<0.1) have greater odds of non-NCD-related mortality-risks than Northern regions. Urban residence (OR=01.34; p<0.05) has significantly higher odds of CVD-related mortality-risk than rural residence. OBC (OR=0.59; p<0.01) has lower odds of cancer-related mortality risks than general caste. North-eastern region (OR=2.00; p<0.01) has significantly greater odds of diabetes-related mortality risks.

Conclusions: the premature and old-age mortality components would help formulate and execute integrated interventions aimed at specific age groups and causes-specific mortality. Medical care, pollution management, environmental control, more involvement in physical activity and a healthy lifestyle could assist in lowering the CVD, cancer & diabetes-related mortality. A new strategy is needed to avoid future deaths and burdens from ageing-related CVD.
medRxiv
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Saikia, Nandita
62aac0cc-9c33-4a67-a6a6-fb71089c21d1
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Saikia, Nandita
62aac0cc-9c33-4a67-a6a6-fb71089c21d1

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

Background: studies on cause-specific mortality among 45+ adults remain unknown in Indian settings. However, understanding the epidemiology of this public health problem can guide policy development for premature and old-age mortality prevention. Therefore, we intend to examine the socio-economic and demographic determinants of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality among 45+ adults in India.

Methods: we adopted the cross-sectional data from the Longitudinal Ageing Study of India (LASI-wave-I) conducted in 2017-18. We performed descriptive, bivariate and multivariate analysis.

Results: females, young-old, middle-old, oldest-old showed lower odds of all-cause, main-cause and sub-cause mortality than males and middle-aged adults. Central region showed significantly greater odds of all-cause mortality risks than Northern region. Christians have lower odds of all-cause mortality risk than Hindus. With the increase in household income, the odds of NCD-related mortality risks also increase. Central (OR=1.54; p<0.01), Eastern (OR=1.28; p<0.01) and Western regions (OR=1.18; p<0.1) have greater odds of non-NCD-related mortality-risks than Northern regions. Urban residence (OR=01.34; p<0.05) has significantly higher odds of CVD-related mortality-risk than rural residence. OBC (OR=0.59; p<0.01) has lower odds of cancer-related mortality risks than general caste. North-eastern region (OR=2.00; p<0.01) has significantly greater odds of diabetes-related mortality risks.

Conclusions: the premature and old-age mortality components would help formulate and execute integrated interventions aimed at specific age groups and causes-specific mortality. Medical care, pollution management, environmental control, more involvement in physical activity and a healthy lifestyle could assist in lowering the CVD, cancer & diabetes-related mortality. A new strategy is needed to avoid future deaths and burdens from ageing-related CVD.

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2022.05.22.22275425v1.full - Author's Original
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Published date: 23 May 2022

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Local EPrints ID: 491397
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491397
PURE UUID: be2c1f0e-48b9-4268-925d-142f1c1ab059
ORCID for Saddaf Naaz Akhtar: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0346-5220

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Date deposited: 21 Jun 2024 16:40
Last modified: 22 Jun 2024 02:11

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Author: Saddaf Naaz Akhtar ORCID iD
Author: Nandita Saikia

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